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1.
The use of n-octyl-beta-d-glucopyranoside along with sodium dodecyl sulfate improves the retention of chlorophyll (Chl) by chlorophyll-protein complexes (CPs) prepared from thylakoids of Euglena gracilis Klebs var bacillaris Cori and yields several additional complexes. Thylakoids from wild-type (WT) cells, solubilized in these detergents and subjected to polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis at 0 degrees C, yield the following CPs, in order of relative molecular weight, containing the pigments shown in parentheses with their respective molar ratios where determined: CP Ia (Chl a, diadinoxanthin and beta-carotene; 100:12:5); CP I (Chl a and beta-carotene; 100:6-12); CPx (Chl and carotenoids); LHCP(2) (light-harvesting CP oligomer) (Chl a, Chl b, diadinoxanthin and neoxanthin; 12:4:3:1); CPy (Chl a, diadinoxanthin and beta-carotene; 100:14:8); CPa (Chl a and beta-carotene; 100:18-25) and LHCP (monomer) (Chl a, Chl b, diadinoxanthin and neoxanthin; 12:6:4:1). The LHCP complexes retain up to 40% of the total Chl and 80% of the Chl b in the thylakoids. CP Ia contains only a trace of Chl b (Chl a/b [mol/mol] = 62). The lower amount of Chl b in Euglena (about 10% of Chl a + b) compared to higher plants (about 30% of Chl a + b) is probably a consequence of the lower Chl b (relative to Chl a) in the LHCPs of Euglena rather than of fewer LHCPs being present. G(1)BU, Gr(1)BSL, and O(4)BSL, mutants of bacillaris low in Chl b (1-2% of Chl a + b), lack the CP Ia, LHCP, and LHCP(2) found in wildtype (WT); G(1) and O(4) also lack CPy. The mutants contain reduced amounts of Chl a (two-thirds of WT in Gr(1) and one-third in G(1) and O(4)) and neoxanthin (20-40% of WT) but retain levels of beta-carotene and diadinoxanthin close to those in cells of WT. The CPs remaining in the mutants have pigment compositions very similar to their counterparts from WT.  相似文献   

2.
The biogenetic interdependence of light-harvesting chlorophyll (Chl) a/b proteins (LHCPs) and antenna pigments has been analyzed for two nuclear mutants of Chlamydomonas that have low levels of Chl b, neoxanthin, and loroxanthin. In mutant PA2.1, the apoprotein precursors (pLHCP II) of the major light-harvesting complex LHC II were synthesized at approximately wild-type rates, processed to their mature size, and rapidly degraded. Because the bulk of labile LHCP II in PA2.1 was soluble, a thylakoid integration factor apparently is defective in this strain. Chl a, Chl b, neoxanthin, and loroxanthin synthesis and accumulation were coordinately reduced in PA2.1, indicating that LHCP II play important regulatory or substrate roles in de novo synthesis of these pigments. Mutant GE2.27 is impaired principally in Chl b synthesis but nonetheless accumulated wild-type levels of all LHCPs. Topology studies of the GE2.27 LHCP II demonstrated that their insertion into thylakoids was incomplete even though they were not structurally altered. Thus, Chl b formation mediates conformational changes of LHCP II after thylakoid integration is initiated. GE2.27 also exhibited very low rates of neoxanthin synthesis and was unable to accumulate loroxanthin. Revertant GE2.27 strains with varying capacities for Chl b formation provided additional evidence that neoxanthin synthesis and accumulation are coupled with the final steps of LHCP II integration into thylakoids. We propose that biogenesis of LHC includes interdependent pigment synthesis/assembly events that occur during LHCP integration into the thylakoid membrane and that defects in these events account for the pleiotropic characteristics of many Chl b-deficient mutants.  相似文献   

3.
Chlorophyll-protein complexes (CPs) obtained from thylakoids of Euglena gracilis Klebs var bacillaris Cori contain the following polypeptides (listed in parentheses in order of prominence after Coomassie R-250 staining of polyacrylamide gels): CP Ia (66, 18, 22, 22.5, 27.5, 21, 28, 24, 25.5, and 26 kilodaltons [kD]); CP I (66 kD); CPx (41 kD); LHCP2 (an oligomer of LHCP) (26.5, 28, and 26 kD); CPy (27 and 19 kD); CPa (54 kD); and LHCP (26.5, 28, and 26 kD). Mutants of bacillaris low in chlorophyll b (Gr1BSL, G1BU, and O4BSL; Chl a/b [mol/mol] = 50-100) which lack CP Ia, LHCP2, and LHCP also lack or are deficient in polypeptides associated with these complexes in wild-type cells. Mutants G1 and O4, which also lack CPy, lack the CPy-associated polypeptides found in wild-type and Gr1. Using an antiserum which was elicited by and reacts strongly and selectively with the SDS-treated major polypeptide (26.5 kD) of the LHCP complexes of wild-type, this polypeptide is undetectable in the mutants (0.25% of the level in wild-type on a cell basis); the antiserum does not react with the SDS-treated 28 kD polypeptide of the Euglena LHCP complexes and cross-reacts only very weakly with components in SDS-treated cells of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii Dangeard and chloroplasts of Spinacia oleracea L. cv Winter Bloomsdale. Rates of photosynthesis of the wild-type and mutant cells of Euglena are approximately equal on a cell basis when measured at light saturation, consistent with the selective loss of major antenna components but not CP I or CPa from the mutants.  相似文献   

4.
SDS-solubilized thylakoid membranes of Bryopsis maxima showeda similar pattern to those of higher plants in SDS-poIyacrylamidegel electrophoresis. Absorption spectra and pigment compositionof both CP1 and CPa bands were similar to those of higher plantsand other algae. Five bands containing chlorophyll (Chl) b weredivided into three categories; a group of major light-harvestingChl a/b-protein complexes (LHCP 1, LHCP 2 and LHCP 3), a minorLHCP (LHCP 3') and a photosystem I complex (CP1a). LHCP 1, thehigh molecular form, showed the lowest Chl a/b ratio among theLHCPs, and contained only xanthophylls as carotenoids. LHCP2, LHCP 3 and LHCP 3' bands contained xanthophylls and carotene.Carotenoid composition of LHCP 3' was different from that ofthe major LHCPs. CP1a band contained a considerable amount ofsiphonaxanthin and siphonein. (Received May 24, 1985; Accepted December 13, 1985)  相似文献   

5.
The plastids of dark-grown resting cells of Euglena gracilisKlebs var. bacillaris Cori undergo only limited developmentwhen illuminated at the developmental threshold for light intensity7 foot-candles (ft-c) (27 µW/cm2). In the present work,we have found that these low intensity cells have substantialamounts of electron transport components such as ferredoxin-NADPreductase and Cyt c-552 but only trace amounts of the majorantenna components such as the light-harvesting Chl-proteincomplex (LHCP), the LHCP oligomer, CP la, Chi b and the 26.5kDa apo-LHCP; CP I and CPa are at levels comparable to the electrontransport components. Exposure of the low intensity cells tonormal light intensity causes large increases in major antennacomponents and small increases in electron transport components.The kinetics of accumulation of the antenna components Chi band apo-LHCP during greening of dark-grown resting cells atnormal intensities are the same as for Chi a. The low intensitywild-type cells strongly resemble mutants of Euglena low inChi b grown at normal intensities in lacking major antenna components. (Received April 7, 1987; Accepted June 19, 1987)  相似文献   

6.
A chlorophyll (a + b)--protein complex associated with photosystem I (PSI) was isolated from a larger PSI complex (CPIa) produced by electrophoresis of barley thylakoids solubilized with 300 mM octyl glucoside. It had an apparent Mr of 35,000-43,000 on 7.5% and 10% acrylamide gels respectively, and a chlorophyll a/b ratio of 2.5 +/- 1.5. Denaturation released four polypeptides migrating between 21-24 kDa. They were well separated from the polypeptides of the two photosystem II chlorophyll a + b antenna complexes: LHCII (25-27 kDa) and CP29 (28-29 kDa). In order to study the PSI antenna complex, antibodies were raised against highly purified CPIa. The antigen appeared to be pure when electrophoresed, blotted and reacted with its antiserum, i.e. anti-CPIa detected only the 64-66-kDa CPI apoprotein and the four 21-24 kDa antenna polypeptides. However, when blotted against the whole spectrum of thylakoid proteins, it cross-reacted with both LHCII and CP29 apoproteins. Removal of anti-CPI activity from the anti-CPIa did not affect these cross-reactions, showing that they were not due to antibodies directed against CPI. To show that the same antibody population was reacting with both the photosystem I and photosystem II antenna polypeptides, anti-CPIa was adsorbed onto highly purified CPIa on nitrocellulose. The bound antibody was eluted and used again in a Western blot against whole thylakoid proteins. This selected antibody population showed the same relative strength of reaction with photosystem I and photosystem II antenna polypeptides as the original antibody population had. Similar observations have been made with antibodies to the two photosystem II antenna complexes. We therefore conclude that there are antigenic determinants in common among the chlorophyll a + b binding polypeptides, and predict that there could be amino acid sequence similarities.  相似文献   

7.
The kinetics of accumulation of light harvesting chlorophyll (Chl) a/b-binding polypeptides (LHCPs) in thylakoid membranes were analyzed during greening of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii y-1 at 38°C. Initial accumulation of LHCPs in thylakoid membranes was linear; LHCP precursors or polypeptides in transit within the chloroplast stroma were not detected. The rate of accumulation in the light was at least five-fold greater than that in the dark. The relatively small amount of LHCPs that accumulated in the dark was integrated properly in the membrane, as judged by the pattern of cleavage in vitro by exogenous proteases, and did not turn over at a significant rate in vivo. The kinetic data suggested that in y-1 cells either translation of LHCP mRNA was inhibited in the dark or newly synthesized polypeptides were degraded concurrently with transport into the chloroplast unless rescued by Chl. LHCPs accumulated in cells of the Chl b-deficient strain pg-113 at the same rate in the dark or the light at 38°C, an indication that light did not affect translation of LHCP mRNA. Membrane-associated LHCPs in pg-113 cells were completely degraded, in contrast to those in y-1 cells, by exogenous proteases, which suggested that pg-113 cells are deficient in a proteolytic activity. A peptidase was recovered from y-1 cells in a membrane fraction with a buoyant density slightly less than that of thylakoid membranes. Although a role for this activity in degradation of LHCPs has not been established, the specific activity of this peptidase in pg-113 cells was only 10 to 15% of the level in y-1 cells.  相似文献   

8.
Low temperature sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis following mild solubilization of Euglena thylakoid components allowed to resolve, in addition to the main CP1, CPa and LHCP chlorophyll-protein complexes, the additional CP1a and LHCP green bands. A carotenoid enriched band CPc can be separated from CPa using high acrylamide concentration. Pigment and polypeptide composition of these complexes were analyzed by absorption and fluorescence measurements and two dimensional gel electrophoresis. Spectral properties of CP1 and CP1a indicate an heterogenous organization of chlorophyll and the presence of significant amount of chlorophyll b in these complexes. They both contain a major 68 kilodalton polypeptide associated with three minor low molecular weight polypeptides in CP1a. CPa and CPc exhibit a characteristic fluorescence emission at 687 nm and they each contain one polypeptide of 54 and 41 Kda respectively. LHCP and LHCP are less abundant than in higher plant thylakoids and they contain a lower proportion of chl b (chl a: chl b=3). They include two polypeptides of 26 and 29 Kda.Abbreviations chl chlorophyll - SDS Sodium Dodecyl Sulfate - EDTA Ethylene Diamine Tetraacetic Acid - DTT Dithiothreitol  相似文献   

9.
A procedure of two-dimensional gel electrophoresis adapted for application on membrane proteins from the thylakoids is described. It involves isoelectric focusing in the first dimension and size dependent electrophoresis in the second dimension. About 100 polypeptides are clearly separated with relatively little streaking. About 20 polypeptides are identified by immunoblotting or location in the gel. They are the polypeptides of the PS I core, the 64 kDa protein, the and subunits of CF1 ATPase, cytochrome f, Rieske iron-sulfur protein, the 23 kDa and 33 kDa polypeptides of the oxygen evolving complexes, CP29, CP24, CP27 and CP25 (last two proteins belong to LHCII). Some proteins give rise to two or more separate spots indicating a separation of different isoforms of these proteins. Among them, the LHCII polypeptides (27 kDa and 25 kDa) were each resolved into at least three spots in the pH range 4.75–5.90; the Rieske FeS protein, as published elsewhere (Yu et al. 1994), was separated into two forms having different isoelectric points (pI 5.1 and 5.4), each of them was also microsequenced; the 64 kDa protein claimed to be a LHCII-kinase was found to be multiple forms appearing in at least two isoforms with pI 6.2 (K1) and 6.0 (K2) respectively, furthermore, K1 can be resolved into two subpopulations.The lateral distribution of these proteins in the thylakoid membrane was determined by analysing the vesicles originating from different parts of the thylakoids. The data obtained from this analysis can be partially used as markers for different thylakoid domains.This procedure for sample solubilization and 2-D electrophoresis is useful for the analysis of the polypeptide composition of vesicles originating from the thylakoid membrane and for microsequences of individual polypeptides isolated from the 2-D gel.  相似文献   

10.
Kohorn BD 《Plant physiology》1990,93(1):339-342
Eukaryotic light harvesting proteins (LHCPs) bind pigments and assemble into complexes (LHCs) that channel light energy into photosynthetic reaction centers. The structures of several prokaryotic LHCPs are known and histidines are important for the binding of the associated pigments. It has been difficult to predict how the eukaryotic LHCPs associate with pigments as the structure of the major LHCP of photosystem II is not yet known. While each LHCPII binds approximately 13 chlorophylls the protein contains only three histidines, one in each putative transmembrane helix. Experiments that use isolated pea (Pisum sativum L.) chloroplasts and mutant LHCPII synthesized in vitro show that the substitution of either an alanine or an arginine for each histidine residue inhibits some aspect of LHCII assembly. The histidine of the first membrane helix, but not the second or third, may be involved in the transport across the chloroplast envelope. No histidine alone is essential for the insertion of LHCP into thylakoid membranes, yet arginine substitutions are more inhibitory than those of alanine. The histidine replacements have their most pronounced effect on the assembly of LHCP into LHCII.  相似文献   

11.
The chlorophyll-protein complexes of the thylakoid membrane from Prochlorothrix hollandica were identified following electrophoresis under nondenaturing conditions. Five complexes, CP1-CP5, were resolved and these green bands were analyzed by spectroscopic and immunological methods. CP1 contains the photosystem I (PSI) reaction center, as this complex quenched fluorescence at room temperature, and had a 77 K fluorescence emission peak at 717 nm. CP4 contains the major chlorophyll-a-binding proteins of the photosystem II (PSII) core, because this complex contained polypeptides which cross-reacted to antibodies raised against Chlamydomonas PSII proteins 5 and 6. Furthermore, fluorescence excitation studies at 77 K indicated that only a Chl a is bound to CP4. Complexes CP2, CP3 and CP5 contained functionally bound Chl a and b as judged by absorption spectroscopy at 20 degrees C and fluorescence excitation spectra at 77 K. CP2, CP3 and CP5 all contain polypeptides of 30-33 kDa which are immunologically distinct from the LHC-II complex of higher plant thylakoids.  相似文献   

12.
The apoproteins of the light-harvesting chlorophyll-protein complexes LHCI and CP29 (apparent molecular weights of 27 kDa and 29 kDa, respectively) of Euglena gracilis were identified immunologically. Both complexes are present in the thylakoids of autotrophically cultured Euglena cells during the whole cell cycle. The relative amount of each apoprotein tends to increase towards the end of the cell cycle. The light-harvesting chlorophyll-protein complex of photosystem II, LHCII, of E. gracilis contains chlorophyll a, chlorophyll b, neoxanthin, diadinoxanthin and beta-carotene. Its chlorophyll a/b ratio is about 1.7 during the whole cell cycle. About 9 h after cell division the ratio of diadinoxanthin to chlorophyll a is doubled for a time of 3–4 h. The relevance of this increase during one developmental stage is discussed in relation to the insertion and-or assembly of newly synthesized LHCII.Abbreviations LHCP light-harvesting chlorophyll-protein complex - PS photosystem This research was partly supported by the Deutsche Forschungsge meinschaft.  相似文献   

13.
Polypeptides of the three major chlorophyll a + b protein complexes were detected in a chlorophyll-b-less barley mutant (chlorina f2) using immunological techniques. Antibodies to CP Ia, a photosystem I complex containing both the reaction center (CP I) and the chlorophyll a + b antenna (LHCI), detected substantial amounts of LHCI polypeptides in mutant thylakoids. Some polypeptides of the two photosystem-II-associated chlorophyll a + b complexes, CP 29 and LHCII, were also detected using antibodies raised against these complexes. The CP 29 apoprotein and the minor 25-kDa polypeptide of LHCII were present in amounts that could be seen by Coomassie blue staining. In contrast, the two major polypeptides of LHCII were greatly diminished in amount, and one of them may be completely absent. These data suggest that the absence of chlorophyll b may have differing effects on the synthesis, processing or turnover of the various chlorophyll a + b binding polypeptides. They also show that these polypeptides can be inserted into thylakoids in the absence of Chl b, and that significant amounts of some of them are accumulated in the mutant thylakoids.  相似文献   

14.
The precursor for a Lemna light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b protein (pLHCP) has been synthesized in vitro from a single member of the nuclear LHCP multigene family. We report the sequence of this gene. When incubated with Lemna chloroplasts, the pLHCP is imported and processed into several polypeptides, and the mature form is assembled into the light-harvesting complex of photosystem II (LHC II). The accumulation of the processed LHCP is enhanced by the addition to the chloroplasts of a precursor and a co-factor for chlorophyll biosynthesis. Using a model for the arrangement of the mature polypeptide in the thylakoid membrane as a guide, we have created mutations that lie within the mature coding region. We have studied the processing, the integration into thylakoid membranes, and the assembly into light-harvesting complexes of six of these deletions. Four different mutant LHCPs are found as processed proteins in the thylakoid membrane, but only one appears to have an orientation in the membrane that is similar to that of the wild type. No mutant LHCP appears in LHC II. The other two mutant LHCPs cannot be detected within the chloroplasts. We conclude that stable complex formation is not required for the processing and insertion of altered LHCPs into the thylakoid membrane. We discuss the results in light of our model.  相似文献   

15.
In recent years major progress has been made in describing the gene families that encode the polypeptides of the light-harvesting antenna system of photosystem II (PSII). At the same time, advances in the biochemical characterization of these antennae have been hampered by the high degree of similarity between the apoproteins. To help interpret the molecular results, we have re-examined the composition, the assembly and the phosphorylation patterns of the light-harvesting antenna of PSII (LHCII) in the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii Dang, using a non-Tris SDS-PAGE system capable of resolving polypeptides that differ by as little as 200 daltons. Research to date has suggested that in C. reinhardtii the LHCII comprises just four polypeptides (p11, p13, p16 and p17), and CP29 and CP26 just one polypeptide each (p9 and p10, respectively), i.e. a total of six polypeptides. We report here that these antenna systems contain at least 15 polypeptides, 10 associated with LHCII, 3 with CP29, and 2 with CP26. All of these polypeptides have been positively identified by means of appropriate antibodies. We also demonstrate substantial heterogeneity to the pattern of in-vitro phosphorylation, with major differences found among members of closely spaced and immunologically related polypeptides. Most intriguing is the fact that the polypeptides that cross-react with the anti-type 2 LHCII antibodies of higher plants (p16, and to a lesser extent p11) are not phosphorylated, whereas in higher plants these are the most highly phosphorylated polypeptides. Also, unlike in higher plants, CP29 is heavily phosphorylated. Phosphorylation does not appear to have any effect on the mobility of polypeptides on fully denaturing SDS-PAGE gels. To learn more about the accumulation and organization of the light-harvesting polypeptides, we have also investigated a chlorophyll b-less mutant, cbn1-48. The LHCII is almost completely lost in this mutant, along with at least some LHCI. But the accumulation of CP29 and CP26 and their binding to PSII core complexes, is relatively unaffected. As expected, the loss of antenna polypeptides is accompanied by a reduction of the size of large reaction-center complexes. Following in-vitro phosphorylation the number of phosphorylated proteins is greatly increased in the mutant thylakoids compared to wildtype thylakoids. We present a model of the PSII antenna system to account for the new polypeptide complexity we have demonstrated.This work was supported by National Institute of Health grant GM22912 to L.A.S. We would like to thank Anastasios Melis for helpful discussions.  相似文献   

16.
Peptide composition and arrangement of 4 major light harvesting complexes LHCP1-3 and LHCP3′isolated from siphonous green algae (Codium fragile (Sur.) Hariot.) were investigated. LHCP1 showed five main peptides, 34.4, 31.5, 29.5, 28.2 and 26.5 kD in SDS PAGE, the 34.4 and 31.5 kD peptides were never found in higher plants. LHCP3 contained the other four kinds of LHCP1 peptides except 34.4 kD, while LHCP3′consisted of only 28.2 and 26.5 kD peptides. We found that 34.4, 28.2 and 26.5 kD peptides were easy to decompose from LHCP 1 when subjected to SDS PAGE without pretreatment. They might be located at the exterior of LHCP1, while the 31.5 and 29.5 kD peptides were at the central part. The 28.2 and 26.5 kD peptides often occurred in CPa, the center complex of PSⅡ. They are possibly the LHCⅡ peptides tightly associated with CCⅡ. According to the results described above, a peptide map of LHCP1 was sketched.  相似文献   

17.
Ohki  Kaori  Honjho  Saori 《Photosynthesis research》1997,53(2-3):121-127
Chl a-containing, very small unicellular, eukaryotic phytoplankton (picophytoplankton) often become the dominant organisms near the bottom of the euphotic zone in the ocean, where light is limited, not only in intensity (about 0.5% of the surface irradiance), but also in quality (dominant in blue to green wavelengths). We have isolated picophytoplankton from subsurface waters (from 75 to 150 m in depth) of the Kuroshio area near Japan. EM observations showed that a single chloroplast occupies a large part of the cytoplasm. Some of the isolates have a flagellum. The major photosynthetic pigments found in these isolates were chlorophyll a and b. The light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b complex (LHCP) was isolated from three clones of picophytoplankton, one flagellated form (NIBB8001) and two coccoid forms (94B8100A and 94B5100C) . More than 50% of the total chlorophylls were recovered in the major LHCP fraction. A common feature of the major LHCPs isolated from the three picophytoplankton clones was a high abundance of chlorophyll b: the ratios of chlorophyll a to b were about 0.8, 0.7 and 0.6 for the clones NIBB8001, 94B8100A and 94B5100C, respectively. These values were very low compared with those in chlorophyll a/b-binding LHCIIs in higher plants and in the major chlorophyll a/b-binding LHCPs in microalgae (higher than 1.0). The major LHCP apoproteins of NIBB8001 and 94B5100C contained one major polypeptide; the apparent molecular masses analyzed with SDS-PAGE were about 22 kDa and 27 kDa, respectively. The major LHCP apoprotein of 94B8100A had two major polypeptides having apparent molecular masses of about 23 and 25 kDa. None of the thylakoid proteins cross-reacted with an antibody raised against the LHC II apoprotein of spinach. It is suggested that the high abundance of chlorophyll b in picophytoplankton, together with a large chloroplast in a small cell, enable them to utilize the reduced light in their habitat.  相似文献   

18.
The formation of Chl-protein complexes (CPs) in cucumber cotyledonsduring a dark period after a brief illumination was studied.SDS-PAGE analysis showed that the P700-Chl a-protein complex(CP1) and Chl a-protein complex of the PS II core (CPa) increased,with a concomitant decrease in the light-harvesting Chl a/6-proteincomplex of PS II (LHCII), during 24-h dark incubation of cotyledonsafter 6h of continuous illumination. In agreement with theseresults, curve analysis revealed that spectral components characteristicof CP1 and CPa increased while those of Chi b decreased duringthe dark incubation. Since Chl is not synthesized in the dark,Chl must be released from LHCII and re-incorporated into CP1and CPa. The amounts of apoproteins of CP1 and 43 kDa protein(one of the apoproteins of CPa) increased during the dark incubation,and the increase could be inhibited by chloramphenicol (CAP).CP1 did not increase in the dark when tissues were incubatedwith CAP which inhibited the synthesis of apoproteins of CP1,indicating that CP formation by Chl redistribution needs newlysynthesized apoproteins. The decrease in LHCII apoproteins duringdark incubation was inhibited by CAP probably because Chl wasnot removed from LHCII by apoproteins of CP1 and CPa, whosesynthesis was blocked by the presence of CAP. When intermittently-illuminatedcotyledons containing a little LHCII were incubated with CaCl2in the dark, Chl b and LHCII apoproteins accumulated with thedisappearance of 43 kDa protein; Chl of 43 kDa protein may beutilized for LHCII formation. We concluded that Chl moleculesonce bound with their apoproteins are redistributed among theapoproteins. (Received October 17, 1990; Accepted December 6, 1990)  相似文献   

19.
A 31 kDa polypeptide that accumulates in the thylakoids when maize leaves are chilled to 5°C in the light is characterized using monoclonal antibodies and analyses of chlorophyll-protein complexes. This polypeptide reacted with a monoclonal antibody, MLH2, that was specific for the 28 kDa polypeptide of the light-harvesting complex (LHCII) of pea leaves. On chilling leaves the appearance of a chlorophyll-protein complex having an apparent molecular weight of 31 kDa coincided with the appearance of a 31 kDa polypeptide and a decrease in the 29 kDa chlorophyll-protein, CP29. Returning the leaves to 25°C for 1 h produced a loss of both the 31 kDa chlorophyll-protein and 31 kDa polypeptide from the thylakoids, and an increase in the amount of CP29. Breakdown of the 31 kDa polypeptide in vitro was Mg2+-dependent and inhibited by EDTA and transition metal ions. It is suggested that the 31 kDa polypeptide may be a precursor of the apoprotein of CP29 and can bind chlorophyll. The appearance of the 31 kDa polypeptide correlated with a marked change in the 77 K fluorescence emission spectra of isolated LHCII particles, which did not revert with the disappearance of the 31 kDa on returning the leaves to 25°C for 1 h. The physiological significance of this spectral perturbation is discussed.  相似文献   

20.
Previous investigations (Specht, S., Pistorius, E.K. and Schmid, G.H.: Photosynthesis Res. 13, 47–56, 1987) of Photosystem II membranes from tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L. cv. John William's Broadleaf) which contain normally stacked thylakoid membranes and from two chlorophyll deficient tobacco mutants (Su/su and Su/su var. Aurea) which have low stacked or essentially unstacked thylakoids with occasional membrane doublings, have been extended by using monospecific antisera raised against the three extrinsic polypeptides of 33,21 and 16 kDa. The results show that all three peptides are synthesized as well in wild type tobacco as in the two mutants to about the same level and that they are present in thylakoid membranes of all three plants. However, in the mutants the 16 and 21 kDa peptides (but not the 33 kDa peptide) are easily lost during solubilization of Photosystem II membranes. In the absence of the 16 and 21 kDa peptide Photosystem II membranes from the mutants have a higher O2 evolving activity without addition of CaCl2 than the wild type Photosystem II membranes. On the other hand, after removal of the 33 kDa peptide no significant differences in the binding of Mn could be detected among the three plants. The results also show that reaction center complexes from wild type tobacco and the mutant Su/su are almost identical to the Triton-solubilized Photosystem II membranes from the mutant Su/su var. Aurea.Abbreviations PS photosystem - chl chlorophyll - LHCP light harvesting chlorophyll a/b protein complex - WT wild type - OEE1, OEE2 and OEE3 oxygen evolution enhancing complex of 29–36 kDa, 21–24 kDa and 16–18 kDa, respectively  相似文献   

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